import re
import time

import requests
import six
from requests import Request, Response
from requests.auth import HTTPBasicAuth
from requests.exceptions import (InvalidSchema, InvalidURL, MissingSchema,
                                 RequestException)

from six.moves.urllib.parse import urlparse, urlunparse

from . import events
from .exception import CatchResponseError, ResponseError

absolute_http_url_regexp = re.compile(r"^https?://", re.I)


class LocustResponse(Response):

    def raise_for_status(self):
        if hasattr(self, 'error') and self.error:
            raise self.error
        Response.raise_for_status(self)


class HttpSession(requests.Session):
    """
    Class for performing web requests and holding (session-) cookies between requests (in order
    to be able to log in and out of websites). Each request is logged so that locust can display 
    statistics.
    
    This is a slightly extended version of `python-request <http://python-requests.org>`_'s
    :py:class:`requests.Session` class and mostly this class works exactly the same. However 
    the methods for making requests (get, post, delete, put, head, options, patch, request) 
    can now take a *url* argument that's only the path part of the URL, in which case the host 
    part of the URL will be prepended with the HttpSession.base_url which is normally inherited
    from a Locust class' host property.
    
    Each of the methods for making requests also takes two additional optional arguments which 
    are Locust specific and doesn't exist in python-requests. These are:
    
    :param name: (optional) An argument that can be specified to use as label in Locust's statistics instead of the URL path. 
                 This can be used to group different URL's that are requested into a single entry in Locust's statistics.
    :param catch_response: (optional) Boolean argument that, if set, can be used to make a request return a context manager 
                           to work as argument to a with statement. This will allow the request to be marked as a fail based on the content of the 
                           response, even if the response code is ok (2xx). The opposite also works, one can use catch_response to catch a request
                           and then mark it as successful even if the response code was not (i.e 500 or 404).
    """
    def __init__(self, base_url, *args, **kwargs):
        super(HttpSession, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)

        self.base_url = base_url
        
        # Check for basic authentication
        parsed_url = urlparse(self.base_url)
        if parsed_url.username and parsed_url.password:
            netloc = parsed_url.hostname
            if parsed_url.port:
                netloc += ":%d" % parsed_url.port
            
            # remove username and password from the base_url
            self.base_url = urlunparse((parsed_url.scheme, netloc, parsed_url.path, parsed_url.params, parsed_url.query, parsed_url.fragment))
            # configure requests to use basic auth
            self.auth = HTTPBasicAuth(parsed_url.username, parsed_url.password)
    
    def _build_url(self, path):
        """ prepend url with hostname unless it's already an absolute URL """
        if absolute_http_url_regexp.match(path):
            return path
        else:
            return "%s%s" % (self.base_url, path)
    
    def request(self, method, url, name=None, catch_response=False, **kwargs):
        """
        Constructs and sends a :py:class:`requests.Request`.
        Returns :py:class:`requests.Response` object.

        :param method: method for the new :class:`Request` object.
        :param url: URL for the new :class:`Request` object.
        :param name: (optional) An argument that can be specified to use as label in Locust's statistics instead of the URL path. 
          This can be used to group different URL's that are requested into a single entry in Locust's statistics.
        :param catch_response: (optional) Boolean argument that, if set, can be used to make a request return a context manager 
          to work as argument to a with statement. This will allow the request to be marked as a fail based on the content of the 
          response, even if the response code is ok (2xx). The opposite also works, one can use catch_response to catch a request
          and then mark it as successful even if the response code was not (i.e 500 or 404).
        :param params: (optional) Dictionary or bytes to be sent in the query string for the :class:`Request`.
        :param data: (optional) Dictionary or bytes to send in the body of the :class:`Request`.
        :param headers: (optional) Dictionary of HTTP Headers to send with the :class:`Request`.
        :param cookies: (optional) Dict or CookieJar object to send with the :class:`Request`.
        :param files: (optional) Dictionary of ``'filename': file-like-objects`` for multipart encoding upload.
        :param auth: (optional) Auth tuple or callable to enable Basic/Digest/Custom HTTP Auth.
        :param timeout: (optional) How long in seconds to wait for the server to send data before giving up, as a float, 
            or a (`connect timeout, read timeout <user/advanced.html#timeouts>`_) tuple.
        :type timeout: float or tuple
        :param allow_redirects: (optional) Set to True by default.
        :type allow_redirects: bool
        :param proxies: (optional) Dictionary mapping protocol to the URL of the proxy.
        :param stream: (optional) whether to immediately download the response content. Defaults to ``False``.
        :param verify: (optional) if ``True``, the SSL cert will be verified. A CA_BUNDLE path can also be provided.
        :param cert: (optional) if String, path to ssl client cert file (.pem). If Tuple, ('cert', 'key') pair.
        """
        
        # prepend url with hostname unless it's already an absolute URL
        url = self._build_url(url)
        
        # store meta data that is used when reporting the request to locust's statistics
        request_meta = {}
        
        # set up pre_request hook for attaching meta data to the request object
        request_meta["method"] = method
        request_meta["start_time"] = time.time()
        
        response = self._send_request_safe_mode(method, url, **kwargs)
        
        # record the consumed time
        request_meta["response_time"] = (time.time() - request_meta["start_time"]) * 1000
        
    
        request_meta["name"] = name or (response.history and response.history[0] or response).request.path_url
        
        # get the length of the content, but if the argument stream is set to True, we take
        # the size from the content-length header, in order to not trigger fetching of the body
        if kwargs.get("stream", False):
            request_meta["content_size"] = int(response.headers.get("content-length") or 0)
        else:
            request_meta["content_size"] = len(response.content or b"")
        
        if catch_response:
            response.locust_request_meta = request_meta
            return ResponseContextManager(response)
        else:
            try:
                response.raise_for_status()
            except RequestException as e:
                events.request_failure.fire(
                    request_type=request_meta["method"], 
                    name=request_meta["name"], 
                    response_time=request_meta["response_time"], 
                    exception=e, 
                )
            else:
                events.request_success.fire(
                    request_type=request_meta["method"],
                    name=request_meta["name"],
                    response_time=request_meta["response_time"],
                    response_length=request_meta["content_size"],
                )
            return response
    
    def _send_request_safe_mode(self, method, url, **kwargs):
        """
        Send an HTTP request, and catch any exception that might occur due to connection problems.
        
        Safe mode has been removed from requests 1.x.
        """
        try:
            return requests.Session.request(self, method, url, **kwargs)
        except (MissingSchema, InvalidSchema, InvalidURL):
            raise
        except RequestException as e:
            r = LocustResponse()
            r.error = e
            r.status_code = 0  # with this status_code, content returns None
            r.request = Request(method, url).prepare() 
            return r


class ResponseContextManager(LocustResponse):
    """
    A Response class that also acts as a context manager that provides the ability to manually 
    control if an HTTP request should be marked as successful or a failure in Locust's statistics
    
    This class is a subclass of :py:class:`Response <requests.Response>` with two additional 
    methods: :py:meth:`success <locust.clients.ResponseContextManager.success>` and 
    :py:meth:`failure <locust.clients.ResponseContextManager.failure>`.
    """
    
    _is_reported = False
    
    def __init__(self, response):
        # copy data from response to this object
        self.__dict__ = response.__dict__
    
    def __enter__(self):
        return self
    
    def __exit__(self, exc, value, traceback):
        if self._is_reported:
            # if the user has already manually marked this response as failure or success
            # we can ignore the default haviour of letting the response code determine the outcome
            return exc is None
        
        if exc:
            if isinstance(value, ResponseError):
                self.failure(value)
            else:
                return False
        else:
            try:
                self.raise_for_status()
            except requests.exceptions.RequestException as e:
                self.failure(e)
            else:
                self.success()
        return True
    
    def success(self):
        """
        Report the response as successful
        
        Example::
        
            with self.client.get("/does/not/exist", catch_response=True) as response:
                if response.status_code == 404:
                    response.success()
        """
        events.request_success.fire(
            request_type=self.locust_request_meta["method"],
            name=self.locust_request_meta["name"],
            response_time=self.locust_request_meta["response_time"],
            response_length=self.locust_request_meta["content_size"],
        )
        self._is_reported = True
    
    def failure(self, exc):
        """
        Report the response as a failure.
        
        exc can be either a python exception, or a string in which case it will
        be wrapped inside a CatchResponseError. 
        
        Example::
        
            with self.client.get("/", catch_response=True) as response:
                if response.content == b"":
                    response.failure("No data")
        """
        if isinstance(exc, six.string_types):
            exc = CatchResponseError(exc)
        
        events.request_failure.fire(
            request_type=self.locust_request_meta["method"],
            name=self.locust_request_meta["name"],
            response_time=self.locust_request_meta["response_time"],
            exception=exc,
        )
        self._is_reported = True
